The Good Temp
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Cornell University ILR School DigitalCommons@ILR Book Samples ILR Press 2008 The Good Temp Vicki Smith Esther B. Neuwirth Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/books Thank you for downloading an article from DigitalCommons@ILR. Support this valuable resource today! This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the ILR Press at DigitalCommons@ILR. It has been accepted for inclusion in Book Samples by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@ILR. For more information, please contact [email protected]. If you have a disability and are having trouble accessing information on this website or need materials in an alternate format, contact [email protected] for assistance. The Good Temp Abstract [Excerpt] The story of the explosion of temporary employment and the challenge to the permanent employment contract in the last half of the twentieth century has been told many times. Researchers from''a variety of academic disciplines have written about it, as have activists who organize to help American workers maintain a decent standard of living and a modicum of dignity, and policy analysts who fear the degradation of the employment relationship that seems to be a foregone implication of temporary work. They have focused on different units of analysis: workers who desire permanent jobs but can't find them, workers who have lost out as companies have downsized and restructured, businesses and their myriad reasons for using temporary workers as a solution to their profitability and competition problems, and the temporary help service industry (THS) itself. The Good Temp takes a different tack to explain these developments in labor market institutions and behaviors. Specifically, we look at how the THS industry in the United States reinvented temporary work in the second half of the twentieth century and examine how individual THS agencies continue to manufacture and market this reinvented product—the good temporary worker—today. It is a customized, historically specific make and model whose marketability rested on two selling points: that temporary employment could be a viable alternative to permanent employment and that the workers on whom the system of temporary employment relations depends could be as good as permanent workers and sometimes better. The historical and social construction of "the good temp," we show, was embedded in THS-industry profitmaking strategies and relied on the diffusion of new norms about what constituted acceptable employment practice. Now entrenched, these norms underpin our current employment relations in the United States which many, if not most, of us experience as precarious and contingent, even when we have so-called permanent jobs. Keywords temporary workers, labor markets, employment, personnel policy, human resources Comments The abstract, table of contents, and first twenty-five pages are published with permission from the Cornell University Press. For ordering information, please visit the Cornell University Press. http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/books/38 This article is available at DigitalCommons@ILR: https://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/books/38 The Good Temp Vicki Smith Esther B. Neuwirth ILR Press an imprint of Cornell University Press Ithaca and London &V; ~ , ••• f:-.,.-. .-.,' r.-;»':i-ri Copyright © 2008 by Cornell University All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher. For information, address Cornell University Press, Sage House, 512 East State Street, Ithaca, New York 14850. First published 2008 by Cornell University Press Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Smith, Vicki, 1951- The good temp / Vicki Smith, Esther B, Neuwirth. p. cm. _, Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-8014-4580-4 (cloth : alk. paperj 1. Temporary employees—United States. 2. Temporary help services—United States. 3. Temporary employment—United States I. Neuwirth, Esther B. (Esther Batia), 1966- II. Title. HD5854.2.U6S64 2008 331.257290973—dc22 2007050246 Cornell University Press strives to use environmentally responsible suppliers and materials to the fullest extent possible in the publishing of its books. Such materials include vegetable-based, low-VOC inks and acid-free papers that are recycled, totally chlorine-free, or partly composed of nonwood fibers. For further information, visit our website at www.cornellpress.cornell.edu. Cloth printing 1098 765432 1 CONTENTS Acknowledgments vii 1. The Temporary Advantage: Introduction--' ' • 1 2. The Social Construction of New Markets and Products ,'' 32 Personnel and Business Magazine Articles Referenced in Chapter 2 66 3. "We're Not Body Pushers": Constructing a Pool of Good Temps 69 4. Softening "Rough and Tough Managers": Creating "Good Enough" Jobs for Temps 98 5. Shaping and Stabilizing the Personnel Policy Environment 122 6. Do Good Enough Temporary Jobs Make Good Enough Temporary Employment? The Case for Transitional Mobility 148 Appendix I: Analyzing the Management Media 177 Appendix II: Frequently Asked Questions about the Economic and Legal Dimensions of Temporary Employment 183 Notes 191 References 211 Index 229 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We are grateful to the individuals at the organizations we studied and hope that we did justice to them in our effort to analyze the com plexity of their world. Many thanks to our colleagues for contributing important insights on various versions of this work: Chris Benner, Fred Block, Sean O'Riain, Eileen Otis, Jennifer Reich, Preston Rudy, Ellen Scott, Bindi Shah, Eva Skuratowicz, Maureen Sullivan, Mxidula Udayagiri, and participants in the Power and Inequality Workshop at the Univer sity of California, Davis. Others who provided invaluable support include Dorothy Duff Brown, Janet Gouldner, Larry Greer, Patricia Keller, and Carolyn Shaffer. Sarah Ovink's work as research assistant made it possible to complete this manuscript in a timely way. George Gonos gave us valuable advice on the material in Appendix II. And special thanks to Fred Block for intellectual engagement with this project from the start and for his invaluable insights over the years. This work benefited from partial financial and institutional sup port at various stages of the research and writing from the University of California Institute for Labor and Employment (now known as the Labor and Research Fund), the Social Science Research Council's viii Acknowledgments Program on the Corporation as a Social Institution, and the Univer sity of California, Davis Consortium for Women and Research. Finally, we are indebted to our editor Fran Benson for her support and encouragement. We dedicate this book to our families. From Vicki a dedication in the memory of Steve Smith, and to Steve and Molly McMahon. From Estee a dedication to Michael Stein, Rachel, and Simon, for giving my life greater meaning, and to my parents, Rutie and Arieh Neu- wirth, for their love, support, and encouragement. The Good Temp Chapter One The Temporary Advantage Introduction The story of the explosion of temporary employment and the chal lenge to the permanent employment contract in the last half of the twentieth century has been told many times. Researchers from''a va riety of academic disciplines have written about it, as have activists who organize to help American workers maintain a decent standard of living and a modicum of dignity, and policy analysts who fear the degradation of the employment relationship that seems to be a fore gone implication of temporary work. They have focused on different units of analysis: workers who desire permanent jobs but can't find them, workers who have lost out as companies have downsized and restructured, businesses and their myriad reasons for using tempo rary workers as a solution to their profitability and competition prob lems, and the temporary help service industry (THS) itself. The Good Temp takes a different tack to explain these develop ments in labor market institutions and behaviors. Specifically, we look at how the THS industry in the United States reinvented temporary work in the second half of the twentieth century and examine how individual THS agencies continue to manufacture and market this reinvented product—the good temporary worker—today. It is a cus tomized, historically specific make and model whose marketability 2 The Good Temp rested on two selling points: that temporary employment could be a viable alternative to permanent employment and that the workers on whom the system of temporary employment relations depends could be as good as permanent workers and sometimes better. The historical and social construction of "the good temp," we show, was embedded in THS-industry profitmaking strategies and relied on the diffusion of new norms about what constituted acceptable employ ment practice. Now entrenched, these norms underpin our current employment relations in the United States which many, if not most, of us experience as precarious and contingent, even when we have so-called permanent jobs. The Good Temp builds on but goes beyond previous analyses in several ways. First, most researchers have implied that the THS in dustry has simply been in the business of producing generic tempo rary labor, even when their studies have inadvertently documented otherwise. We argue, in contrast, that the industry developed and continues to promote